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I'm sure Mike Cox will surrender himself to the proper authorities

by: jmgear

Mon Jan 15, 2007 at 22:30:52 PM EST


For those who don't know, Michigan's Attorney General, Mike Cox, admitted to an adulterous affair recently, and THEN Cox--who likes to describe himself as "Michigan's top law enforcement official" claimed he did not know whether adultery was a crime in Michigan ...

After reading this piece, I'm changing my name to N-O-B-O-D-Y.

http://freep.com/app...

jmgear :: I'm sure Mike Cox will surrender himself to the proper authorities
BRIAN DICKERSON

Adultery could mean life, court finds

That's what the law says in sex-drug case Cox appealed

January 15, 2007

BY BRIAN DICKERSON

FREE PRESS COLUMNIST

In a ruling sure to make philandering spouses squirm, Michigan's second-highest court says that anyone involved in an extramarital fling can be prosecuted for first-degree criminal sexual conduct, a felony punishable by up to life in prison.

"We cannot help but question whether the Legislature actually intended the result we reach here today," Judge William Murphy wrote in November for a unanimous Court of Appeals panel, "but we are curtailed by the language of the statute from reaching any other conclusion."

"Technically," he added, "any time a person engages in sexual penetration in an adulterous relationship, he or she is guilty of CSC I," the most serious sexual assault charge in Michigan's criminal code.

No one expects prosecutors to declare open season on cheating spouses. The ruling is especially awkward for Attorney General Mike Cox, whose office triggered it by successfully appealing a lower court's decision to drop CSC charges against a Charlevoix defendant. In November 2005, Cox confessed to an adulterous relationship.

Murphy's opinion received little notice when it was handed down. But it has since elicited reactions ranging from disbelief to mischievous giggling in Michigan's gossipy legal community.

The ruling grows out of a case in which a Charlevoix man accused of trading Oxycontin pills for the sexual favors of a cocktail waitress was charged under an obscure provision of Michigan's criminal law. The provision decrees that a person is guilty of first-degree criminal sexual conduct whenever "sexual penetration occurs under circumstances involving the commission of any other felony."

Charlevoix Circuit Judge Richard Pajtas sentenced Lloyd Waltonen to up to four years in prison after he pleaded guilty to two felony counts of delivering a controlled substance. But Pajtas threw out the sexual assault charge against Waltonen, citing the cocktail waitress' testimony that she had willingly consented to the sex-for-drugs arrangement.

Charlevoix prosecuting attorney John Jarema said he decided to appeal after police discovered evidence that Waltonen may have struck drugs-for-sex deals with several other women.

Cox's office, which handled the appeal on the prosecutor's behalf, insisted that the waitress' consent was irrelevant. All that mattered, the attorney general argued in a brief demanding that the charge be reinstated, was that the pair had sex "under circumstances involving the commission of another felony" -- the delivery of the Oxycontin pills.

The Attorney General's Office got a whole lot more than it bargained for. The Court of Appeals agreed that the prosecutor in Waltonen's case needed only to prove that the Oxycontin delivery and the consensual sex were related. But Murphy and his colleagues went further, ruling that a first-degree CSC charge could be justified when consensual sex occurred in conjunction with any felony, not just a drug sale.

The judges said they recognized their ruling could have sweeping consequences, "considering the voluminous number of felonious acts that can be found in the penal code." Among the many crimes Michigan still recognizes as felonies, they noted pointedly, is adultery -- although the Prosecuting Attorneys Association of Michigan notes that no one has been convicted of that offense since 1971.

Some judges and lawyers suggested that the Court of Appeals' reference to prosecuting adulterers was a sly slap at Cox, noting that it was his office that pressed for the expansive definition of criminal sexual conduct the appellate judges so reluctantly embraced in their Nov. 7 ruling.

Murphy didn't return my calls Friday. But Chief Court of Appeals Judge William Whitbeck, who signed the opinion along with Murphy and Judge Michael Smolenski, said that Cox's confessed adultery never came up during their discussions of the case.

"I never thought of it, and I'm confident that it was not something Judge Murphy or Judge Smolenski had in mind," Whitbeck told me Friday. But he chuckled uncomfortably when I asked if the hypothetical described in Murphy's opinion couldn't be cited as justification for bringing first-degree criminal sexual conduct charges against the attorney general.

"Well, yeah," he said.

Cox's spokesman, Rusty Hills, bristled at the suggestion that Cox or anyone else in his circumstances could face prosecution.

"To even ask about this borders on the nutty," Hills told me in a phone interview Saturday. "Nobody connects the attorney general with this -- N-O-B-O-D-Y -- and anybody who thinks otherwise is hallucinogenic."

Hills said Sunday that Cox did not want to comment.

The Court of Appeals opinion could also be interpreted as a tweak to the state Supreme Court, which has decreed that judges must enforce statutory language adopted by the Legislature literally, whatever the consequences.

In many other states, judges may reject a literal interpretation of the law if they believe it would lead to an absurd result. But Michigan's Supreme Court majority has held that it is for the Legislature, not the courts, to decide when the absurdity threshold has been breached.

Whitbeck noted that Murphy's opinion questions whether state lawmakers really meant to authorize the prosecution of adulterers for consensual relationships.

"We encourage the Legislature to take a second look at the statutory language if they are troubled by our ruling," he wrote.

Hills declined to say whether the Attorney General's Office would press for legislative amendments to make it clear that only violent felonies involving an unwilling victim could trigger a first-degree CSC charge.

"This is so bizarre that it doesn't even merit a response," he said.

Meanwhile, Waltonen has asked the state Supreme Court for leave to appeal the Court of Appeals ruling. He still hasn't been tried on the criminal sexual conduct charge. His attorney said a CSC conviction could add dozens of years to Waltonen's current prison sentence.

Justices will decide later this year whether to review the Court of Appeals' decision to reinstate the CSC charge.

The appeals court decision is available at http://courtofappeal.... Search for Docket No. 270229.

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Good thing we don't have the death penalty... (0.00 / 0)
A lesson to be learned (4.00 / 1)
This really chafes at my libertarian side.

First off - I'm no fan of adultery. It breaks up families and does a lot of harm to people. Should it be a felony? No. Should it be illegal - only to the point where an adulterer or adultress gets whacked in divorce court if things go there.

There are probably hundreds of laws on the books that we are all breaking at some point or another - and these are laws we didn't even about since almost nobody enforces them.

Until the Vear bill was signed, it was illegal for anyone without a CPL to transport a pistol to a public range - or anywhere outside of a gun club of which you are a member if you drive a car without a trunk and store the firearm in the trunk. For truck and SUV drivers, that means you are committing a felony - while you are bringing the pistol in for "Safety inspection".

God knows how many archaic and unenforced laws are out there. I think for every law passed, one should be repealed. Personally, I'd start with gun registration/safety inspections, but that's a whole other topic.

"He who would trade liberty for some temporary security, deserves neither liberty nor security" - Benjamin Franklin


How about starting with the needless laws that ARE enforced? (0.00 / 0)
Instead of worrying about laws that aren't enforced much, let's get laws like our insane drug laws that are bankrupting us off the books.  THOSE are the ones to worry about.

See
http://www.thecenter...


[ Parent ]
Both (0.00 / 0)
I'm not a fan of the drug war either, nor the freedoms given up in the name of fighting the drug war. The Patriot Act was based on a similar bipartisan piece of trash bill from 2000 pushed by Orrin Hatch and Janet Reno.

And before anyone asks - no I don't use drugs.

"He who would trade liberty for some temporary security, deserves neither liberty nor security" - Benjamin Franklin


[ Parent ]
But ... but ... (0.00 / 0)
I thought the Attorney General was protecting marriage ...

Republicans don't commit adultery... (0.00 / 0)
At least that's what my right-winged pastor told me when I was growing up!:)

Putting conservatives in charge of our government makes about as much sense as GM hiring a CEO who hates cars.

Dickerson Smickerson (0.00 / 0)
I got a good laugh out of this column.  But I did find it a little odd that Brian Dickerson would write this.

He always comes off a little to the right for me.

But maybe his beef with little mikey is the fact that Dickerson divorced his ex-wife (correct me but i heard she was a or maybe former, ag employee) after cheating on her with a detnews columnist... now I'm not going to be a radical republican and sit here and judge anybody. but i just found it odd that dickerson was the one writing this column as if he was some absolute.

Typical republicans if you ask me - give them and chance and they'll all turn on each other!

Obama '08!
http://www.barackoba...


FREEP Credibility??? (0.00 / 0)
What is up with the FREEP, first Mitch Album writes about an event that he was never at, and now Dickerson writes like he is from the "moral majority". 

If it is true that he indeed cheated on his wife with another reporter, then he should be fired or at very least suspended.

I cannot stand hypocrisy, whether it is from right wing or reporters who feel they are above all of us.

Fire Millen


Fieger is on MSNBC talking about it now.... (0.00 / 0)
I haven't seen Fieger in years.  He hasn't aged well!

Anyway, he used his time to bash the Supreme Court 4 to make the point that this is what happens when you put conservative judges on the court.

Fun to see the story making the national news circuit.

Putting conservatives in charge of our government makes about as much sense as GM hiring a CEO who hates cars.


Who did Cox have a fling with? (0.00 / 0)
Could that person report evidence of a felony to someone in a position to prosecute Cox for it? 

Another interesting charge... (0.00 / 0)
In the State Journal every so often an individual is convicted of "seducing an unmarried woman".

  Anybody know under what circumstances a person would be charged with such a thing?

  Is the law against swearing I heard a lot about 10 years ago still on the books?



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